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Bomberg: art that defies definition

This week and to coincide with the 60th anniversary of his death, a touring exhibition of the work of avant-garde artist David Bomberg opens at London’s Ben Uri Gallery.

June 22, 2018 13:40
Bomberg, Evening in the City of London, 1944 Museum of London
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This week, a touring exhibition of the work of avant-garde artist David Bomberg opens at London’s Ben Uri Gallery. It was previously shown to great acclaim at the Pallant Gallery in Chichester, followed by the Laing Gallery in Newcastle. It coincides with the 60th anniversary of Bomberg’s death and includes about 40 major works, some unknown and never exhibited before.

I fell in love with Bomberg when I opened the 220-page illustrated monograph by Ben Uri curators, Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Dickson. The Ben Uri owns 14 Bombergs, most of them in storage because the gallery is too small, and this mystery the sense of his being hidden away from us especially drew me to him.

So what is so special about Bomberg? I was originally fascinated by his Ghetto Theatre, a gloomy red geometric narrative painting, in which the ghetto itself is the elephant in the room. Bomberg’s work in all its phases Cubist, Abstract Expressionist, Vorticist, Modernist, Futurist, Fauvist essentially defies definition because of his vibrant interweaving of so many elements, and, of course, his breathtaking clarity. They are also profoundly spiritual.

The fifth of 11 children born to Polish-Jewish parents in Birmingham in 1890, he soon moved to Whitechapel, the heart of immigrant life. He became absorbed into the artistic côterie known as the Whitechapel Boys.